Posts Tagged ‘Oregon politics’

Not Quite So Simple

Wednesday, April 13th, 2011

By Everett W. Curry

I love history. It became my bachelor’s degree major and continues to be a passion. My interest is in more than base facts of humankind. I seek to understand movements, migrations, and “turning-points.” Recently, I re-read Benjamin Franklin’s autobiography seeking to refresh the influences that put him into so many of those “turning-points” in our nation’s history.

I was given a copy of “Not Quite So Simple,” (Harper & Row, 1968) Mark O. Hatfield’s early reflections on his service and political life. He wrote from notes collected during his busy years at Willamette University and subsequent terms in the Oregon House of Representatives and Oregon Senate.

He had been elected to the U.S. Senate from Oregon just a year prior to writing “Not Quite So Simple.” He sought to provide a rationale for political action, desiring to encourage other capable individuals into the political life of service in the legislative branch of government.

Senator Hatfield deals, in this book, with a range of subjects. Many useful quotes stimulate thinking about the need for personal accountability and integrity in the political life. Two subjects stand out for me, his role in the nomination of General Dwight D. Eisenhower by the Republican Party in 1952, and his deep concern about the long-term meaning of U.S. actions in Viet Nam and how they formed our future relationships with nations. Reading his thoughts from thirty-nine years ago on how Viet Nam would change the way other nations related with the U.S. are as contemporary as if written this year.

One test of a public figure’s leadership is how clearly they perceived the issues and acted on those perceptions in a principled way. Senator Mark O. Hatfield serves as a mode for
those who follow him in public service.

Sen. John Warner Interview

Thursday, March 24th, 2011

One of the interviews on our trip to Washington, D.C., was with former U.S. Senator John Warner, a contemporary of Senator Hatfield. Here are his thoughts on how Senator Hatfield’s military service informed his views on war.

What Happened to Respect, Honor and Compromise?

Wednesday, March 23rd, 2011

By Rick Dancer

Sitting in the top floor of a Portland Skyscraper, waiting for the next interview for the Senator Mark Hatfield Documentary to arrive, my mind wanders. I’m always amazed after doing a set of interviews about “The Senator” how much closer I feel to understanding what God really intended life to be like.

What happened to honor, respect and the ability to compromise? Politics is a fine art that’s been turned into the greatest evil. Perhaps we have too much information at our fingertips. As a former journalist I say that carefully. I wonder that the problem isn’t really the information but the delivery system.
We’ve become a bunch of self-righteous, single-minded citizens in a country founded on the art of compromise.

As I listen to some of the most powerful people in this country talk about what was, what is, and predict what is to come, I am saddened. While each of us goes about our day, the public relations machine massages and masterfully mixes it’s message creating more controversy and unrest. We click on the TV, the latest radio talk show or political website and allow their message to whip us into a frenzy as we move closer and closer to the imaginary lines the parties call principles.

As I listen to U.S. Senator Jeff Merkely talk about Hatfield, and then about politics when the camera is turned off, I realize he and I have some common ground, some area’s where compromise is highly possible.

Do you want to know what the secret to winning this war on America is all about? Sit down with someone you think you disagree with, someone you believe you hate and talk. If you keep in mind what “The Senator” said was most important “Relationship” you can walk away from the conversation with a discovery that “Common Ground” is never easy to find but it’s often somewhere closer to the middle.

Oh, and remember, the public relations machine and media needs to sell and titillate you into buying what they’re selling so don’t expect the “middle” or the “compromise” to be drawing any headlines.

Outside the Boundaries

Wednesday, March 16th, 2011

By Rick Dancer

I wrote a blog the other day talking about my Progressive yet Republican ideals. Progressive is not a term most Republicans claim but ever since hearing Senator Mark Hatfield referred to as an ‘evangelical progressive,’ the term seems to help define me. Progressive is a term that we’ve given to one party when I think many on the right and in the middle would also use to describe themselves.

Perhaps that is what I like best about recording the footsteps and movements of this man named Mark Hatfield. I find him to be an oddity and I mean that in a complimentary way. He is a man who never really seemed to fit into the boundaries his contemporaries tried to draw for him.

Senator Hatfield loved his party but seemed to love fairness and working together even more. He carved a path between conservatives and liberals because he seemed to care more about relationships than labels. Mark Hatfield separated himself from the political crowd and that is not an easy thing to do.

I still have people today walk up to me and say “I loved Mark Hatfield and voted for him every time.” These are not necessarily those who would call themselves the Republican Base, although many of that base also cast ballots for Hatfield. The folks I’m talking about are the progressive liberals who saw in Mark Hatfield a man who believed in the truth, doing the right thing, and standing alone even if it meant coming home.

Working on this documentary helps me define my own political beliefs. Hatfield gives me the courage to define myself as a Progressive, Liberal Republican. Not everyone will agree and as I saw on my personal blog, many tried to argue that description away from me but it didn’t work.

Like Senator Mark Hatfield each one of us will be faced with difficult moments where we too will be forced to decide who we are and what we truly believe in. I pray that I will have the courage to stand alone or come home, like he did.

Production Update: The Home Stretch

Wednesday, March 9th, 2011

By Devon Lyon

The production portion of the Hatfield documentary is in the home stretch.

The team has conducted most of the interviews planned and only a few remain.  Within the next few weeks we will interview a few remaining staffers as well as U.S. Senator Jeff Merkley, who was an intern for Senator Hatfield.  We are also going to interview a few tribal elders from different tribes who worked in the 1980’s with Senator Hatfield on the long process of reinstatement of tribal sovereignty.

As the production winds to a close, we can honestly say it has been an honor to interview the amazing individuals who worked with, served with and called Senator Hatfield a friend.

We are working hard behind the scenes to line up a few surprise VIP interviews.  That process has been going extremely well and we will announce those individuals as soon as appropriate.

Finally, as we move from production into postproduction the final phase of fundraising becomes ever more critical.  The quality and diversity of the interviews have been superb; please help the project finish strong.  For those individuals and organizations that have supported the film, we thank you again for your generosity and vision.

The Scholar Senator

Wednesday, March 2nd, 2011

By Everett Curry

Senator Hatfield’s name carries an appreciation for his long public service. That response is appropriate. He has served us well in this capacity.

There is another association with Mark O. Hatfield.  He is a scholar.  His service as a professor of government at Willamette University enriched that historic institution.  As the depository of his personal and professional papers, the importance continues.  Future students of our history will find his witness to events of great import.

My exposure to Hatfield scholarship is somewhat different.  As a student in theological school, the study of Biblical Greek nearly sunk me!  The need to read Greek to understand and exegete New Testament books required me to succeed.  In the early 90s, I heard that Senator Hatfield would speak at a small congregation in the Willamette Valley.  I attended that session, which turned out to be a worship service, with members of my family.  Knowing that he is, like me, a Baptist, made me even more eager to listen to his message.

To my amazement, when Senator Hatfield stood to read the passage on which he would speak, he translated it on-the-spot from the Greek New Testament!  That scholar’s commitment to the original language demonstrates not only his scholarship, but his maintenance of a skill over a long period of time.  His appreciation for the nuances of the passage brought light to his message.